The "odds" of evolution occurring by chance are so infinitely small
that it is a miracle in itself that such things are still taught as if they
were a "fact" of science.

The following excerpts are from: "A
Closer Look at the Evidence" by Richard and Tina Kleiss. They
illustrate why evolution is (for all practical purposes) a Dying, if not Dead,
theory.

"At one time living cells were considered no more complex than
empty ping pong balls. As biochemists have learned more about the
complexity of life, it has become increasingly apparent that thousands of
specific and complex chemicals are required for any form of life to survive.

Evolutionist Harold Morowitz estimated the probability for chance
formation of even the simplest form of living organism at 1/10340,000,000.
By comparison only 1020 grains of sand
could fit within a cubic mile and 10 billion times more (1030)
would fit inside the entire earth. So, the probability of forming a
simple cell by chance processes is infinitely less likely than having a
blind person select one specifically marked grain of sand out of an entire
earth filled with sand.

There is nowhere near enough time nor matter in the entire universe
for even the simplest cell to have formed by chance combinations. Even
if all the correct chemicals somehow came together in the correct place, you
still wouldn't have life. This is exactly the situation every time
a living organism dies. Immediately after death, all the right
chemicals exist, in the right proportions, and in the right place -- yet the
creature is still dead!

Five billion years is nowhere near long enough for evolution to
have taken place. In reality, all of eternity would not provide
enough time for random processes to form the enormous complexity of
life."

"Page" July 17th

"The simplest conceivable form of life (eg. bacteria) contains
at least 600 different protein molecules. Each of these molecules
performs specific functions by fitting into other molecules shaped in exact
three-dimensional spatial arrangements. These proteins work like a key
fitting into a lock -- only a specifically shaped protein will fit. Yet
there are multiple trillions of possible combinations of protein molecules
and shapes. How could the exactly required shape find the exactly
correct corresponding protein in order to perform the required cellular
function?

"The mathematical probability that the precisely designed
molecules needed for the 'simplest' bacteria could form by chance
arrangement of amino acids (these are the chemicals that link up to form
proteins) is far less than 1 in 10450. Most
scientists acknowledge that any possibility less than one in 1050
is considered an impossibility. One wonders why this
'impossibility' is being taught as a 'fact of science' to millions of school
children each year."